Yellow Cab Co. v. Gattuso

11 Tenn. App. 109, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 79
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 6, 1929
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 11 Tenn. App. 109 (Yellow Cab Co. v. Gattuso) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Yellow Cab Co. v. Gattuso, 11 Tenn. App. 109, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 79 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1929).

Opinion

OWEN, J.

Lucia Gattuso, Administratrix of Petrina Gattuso, recovered a judgment against the defendant for $10,000 for the alleged wrongful death of her decedent, a daughter of the administra-trix seven years of age.

The' suit was originally instituted against the defendant and the Patterson Transfer Company. The case was dismissed before trial as to the defendant, Patterson Transfer Company.

The plaintiff alleged that the defendant negligently and wrongfully ran one of its cabs or automobiles upon and over the body of decedent on February 15, 1927, on Butler avenue in Memphis, Tennessee.

There was a plea of not guilty, a plea of contributory negligence and also a plea that the child, at the time of its death, was violating a city ordinance as it was crossing the street when struck, not at the street crossing but was guilty of what is generally known at “Jay Walking. ’ ’

It appears there have been two trials in this case, the first resulted in a mistrial; after the verdict was rendered at the last trial the defendant seasonably filed a motion for a new- trial, this was overruled, the court suggested a remittitur of five thousand ($5000) dollars. The plaintiff accepted, under protest, and has assigned error as to the court’s action:in ordering the remittitur. The defendant duly, appealed, has signed and filed a proper bill of exceptions and has assigned fourteen errors. These errors will be grouped into four groups.

Under the first group is assignment number ten which complains of the court excluding certain testimony offered by the defendant, by the witness Wade, the driver of the defendant’s taxicab at the *111 time of the accident. The question asked the witness was as follows:

“Was there anything you could have done that you did not do to avoid the accident? A. No, sir.”

It is insisted that this1 was error and in support of this assignment the defendant relies upon the case of Kennedy v. Railroad, 2 Hig. 103.

As to the second group of assignments, they all complain of certain excerpts delivered in the court’s general charge and they are assignments, Nos. 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, and 8.

The third group complains of the court’s refusing special requests offered by the defendant and these are covered by assignments 6, 7 and 9.

By the fourth group, the complaint is made that the verdict is excessive and that the judgment is excessive after the remittitur. This group embraces assignments 11 to 14 inclusive.

There is no assignment that there is no evidence to sustain the verdict. We will make a brief statement of the facts surrounding the accident.

About 3:30 on the afternoon of February 15, 1927, the decedent, a bright, intelligent little girl seven years of age was observed standing on the north curb of Butler avenue, near a driveway that lead’s from Butler ayenue north. Her widowed mother, the administratrix, lived on the south side on Butler avenue and almost opposite from¡ where the child was first observed. The decedent was seen to leave the north curb on Butler avenue and go directly south hurriedly, in a trot or run, as stated by these witnesses. A cab owned and operated by the defendant, and conveying a passenger, at the time, was being, driven east on Butler avenue. This cab was near the center of Butler avenue. Butler avenue is forty feet wide, the cab was going at the rate of fifteen or twenty miles an hour. There was a parked automobile on the north side of Butler avenue, west of where the child was observed to be standing just before she left the curb. When the child reached about the middle of the street, she was struck by the front of the cab, the cab knocked her down, a portion of her hair was- caught under the wheel and it was necessary to push the cab back to pick up the child. The child never regained consciousness and died shortly after being struck.

It was plaintiff’s theory and there is proof to support it, that the driver of the cab, at the time of the accident, was using but one hand on the steering wheel and was looking backward like he was talking to his passenger. -No horn was blown, the emergency brakes were applied as soon as the child was struck and the cab skidded some three feet. There was proof that this cab was some seventy-five feet from the child when the child first entered the street, attempting to< *112 cross and that the parked automobile on the north side would not interfere or obstruct the driver’s view.

It was the theory of the defendant that the child ran out from behind the parked automobile directly in front of the cab; that the driver did not have time to sound the horn' or give any alarm but] that he applied the emergency brake and did everything he could to avoid the accident; that it was an unavoidable accident.

The jury has resolved this conflict in favor of the plaintiff.

The first assignment to be disposed of is No. 10, which complains of the exclusion of testimony. We are cited to page 227 of the record as to where this evidence can be found.' That page of the transcript refers to the motion for a new trial, however, we have read the entire record, especially the evidence of the witness, Wade, the driver of the Yellow Cab at the time of the accident, and while the trial judge ruled that it was incompetent to ask the question and give the .answer complained of, yet, this witness was permitted to testify to certain facts and to certain things that he did do to avoid the accident, and he testified without objection. Immediately following the sustaining of the objection the record shows that counsel for the defendant asked this witness, Wade, the following:

“Q. Could you have stopped — was it possible to have stopped your car any more quickly than you did under the eircum-' stances? A. No, sir.

There was no objection to this question or answer. Furthermore this same witness, in another part of his testimony, made answer to the following questions:

“Q. What happened when she ran out from behind the •parked car? A. Well, as soon as I saw her I applied the brakes, and stopped as soon as I could. Just as I stopped the car knocked her down, I never did run over her.
“Q. Which brakes did you apply? A. Both the foot brakes and the emergency — both.
“Q. Did you apply them as soon as you saw her, or after you saw her, or when? A. As soon as I saw her.”

We have examined: the case of Kennedy v. Railroad Company, 2 Hig. 103, relied upon in support of this assignment. That was a suit brought by an administratrix for the wrongful death of her husband who was killed upon a railroad crossing. The Railroad Company was endeavoring to show that it had complied with the statutory precautions. There was a directed verdict in favor of the Railroad Company, this was reversed by the Court of Civil Appeals and on the appeal it was assigned as error that the court had permitted incompetent testimony as follows:

The engineer in charge of the train was asked at the trial the following question:
*113 “Q.

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Bluebook (online)
11 Tenn. App. 109, 1929 Tenn. App. LEXIS 79, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yellow-cab-co-v-gattuso-tennctapp-1929.